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- <text id=93TT1018>
- <title>
- Feb. 22, 1993: Nanny Outing
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 22, 1993 Uncle Bill Wants You
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- LAW, Page 44
- Nanny Outing
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The first crusade of the Clinton years has millions of families
- worried about being scofflaws
- </p>
- <p>By JOHN GREENWALD--With reporting by Julie Johnson and Nancy Traver/Washington
- </p>
- <p> What a strange kind of hunt it became, this search not for
- spies, or thieves, or traitors, but for...aliens? All last
- week across Washington, and in scores of smaller seats of government
- in towns around the country, there came the confessions. Commerce
- Secretary Ron Brown admitted that he had not paid Social Security
- taxes for a maid who had worked for him for about five years.
- In between plotting his four-part peace plan for Bosnia, Secretary
- of State Warren Christopher said he hired a lawyer and an accountant
- to take a look at his records. The inquisition reportedly eliminated
- as many as a dozen people from posts ranging from commissioner
- of Social Security to chairman of the Federal Housing Administration.
- </p>
- <p> Across America, concerned taxpayers seeking redemption through
- reimbursement flooded government offices with calls. Most wanted
- to know if they owed money for their baby sitter or their housekeeper
- or the kid who mowed the lawn. In West Palm Beach, Florida,
- a perplexed person walked into an IRS office and asked for the
- "Zoe Baird Package" of forms. "That's all people are talking
- about," says Nancy Ransom, director of the Margaret Cuninggim
- Women's Center at Vanderbilt University. "This is not just a
- problem for the poor, the rich or the middle class. This is
- a problem for everyone."
- </p>
- <p> It occurred to the White House that any law that, according
- to the IRS, 3 out of 4 people disobey needs some reviewing.
- Out of the estimated 2 million families that employ some kind
- of domestic help, roughly one-quarter ever files the necessary
- taxes. The Administration will be "looking at everything" in
- connection with the rules, says Clinton spokesman George Stephanopoulos.
- At the same time, Dan Rostenkowski, who chairs the House Ways
- and Means Committee, is sponsoring a bill that would simplify
- filings and permit people to pay the required taxes through
- their own 1040 form. He also wants to raise the $50-per-quarter
- minimum amount that triggers Social Security taxes, set back
- in 1954, to $75. (Thanks to inflation, the $50 minimum would
- come to $600 today.) Experts argue that raising the standard
- much higher could deny many employees the chance to collect
- Social Security benefits.
- </p>
- <p> There are few laws and regulations that carry with them such
- an enormous incentive to ignore them altogether. Under current
- regulations, tax cheats may have to pay twice the amount of
- the overdue levies plus interest. And the punishment for knowingly
- hiring illegal aliens can include six months in prison. "I'm
- trying to find out what the consequences would be for our nanny
- and for ourselves," says a Los Angeles technical writer. "Right
- now, she wants the cash and doesn't want us to pay taxes. But
- I'm worried. I don't want to get caught."
- </p>
- <p> Actually, the IRS has long been lenient with those who voluntarily
- offer to pay overdue taxes. According to a policy statement
- issued last December, "the vast majority of nonfilers need only
- be concerned about filing and paying what they owe." Moreover,
- anyone who employs an illegal alien can pay Social Security
- taxes through a special irs account, and the agency says it
- does not automatically report such filings to the Immigration
- and Naturalization Service. But there is a catch: the IRS naturally
- notifies the Social Security Administration, and that outfit
- does share information with the immigration office.
- </p>
- <p> Rather than run such risks, many people are simply holding back
- and hoping they won't get caught. But while the IRS does not
- routinely ask citizens whether they employ household workers,
- scofflaws can be detected through tax audits called for other
- reasons. The chances of that happening are far greater than
- the risk of being nabbed by the understaffed immigration service.
- Even so, people who voluntarily come forward to confess could
- swiftly find themselves without a nanny. "If someone has an
- illegal worker," notes a spokesman for the immigration agency,
- "there isn't any way to make that person legal without waiting
- a long period of time."
- </p>
- <p> That's because household employees are part of a pool of unskilled
- workers who are limited to 10,000 permanent visas a year, creating
- a wait of 10 years or more before a nanny or other domestic
- can become a legal resident. Senator Edward Kennedy said he
- would decide after a Commission on Immigration Reform hearing
- this week whether to draft a bill that would ease visa quotas
- to allow more nannies and other household workers to remain
- in the country.
- </p>
- <p> For now, the Nannygate scandal has stirred up passions that
- seem certain to outlast it. "We have these convulsions periodically,"
- says Thomas Mann, a senior political analyst at the Brookings
- Institution. "Some kind of behavior comes to the surface because
- of a particular event, then we get a flood of publicity and
- obligatory surveys. Everybody points fingers, and then the tide
- subsides and we return to greater normalcy." While that may
- be true, the country's need for affordable child care is a tide
- that will keep on running.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-